LP 140g vinyl; heavy-duty sleeve, insert with lyrics & download.
RIYL Michael Chapman, Mike Cooper, Steve n, Ryley Walker,
Aldous Harding, Sibylle Baier, Bert Jansch, Gram Parsons &
Emmylou Harris. 'Simultaneously spare and complex, observational
folk ballads turned psychic and strange by metal-stringed
dissonance and troubling Symbolist metaphor.' MOJO // Featuring
contributions from Chris Cohen, Cooper Crain (Bitchin' Bajas),
James Elkington, and members of Outfit & Sun Araw. In the
fall of 2017, a year after the release of her accled 2016
album Open to Chance, Kayla Cohen, the songwriter and guitarist
who records and performs as Itasca, left her home in LA to live
and write for 2 seasons in a century-old adobe house in rural New
Mexico (pictured on the album cover). More urgent escape than
fanciful escapade, the move from one Southwestern desert to
another resulted from a set of dire circumstances, both personal
and societal, not least of which was the sense, shared by many,
that a sinister cabal of impaired lunatics had irredeemably
poisoned the already sour well of our American discourse. She
decided to drop out and dive deeper hiking into the ains,
through fragrant juniper and piñon forests, past groves of golden
cottonwoods, to the source of what she calls in the song Cornsilk
with a nod to poet Clayton Eshleman 'the canyoned river.'
Inspired by the landscape and history of the Four Corners region,
the resulting album, the sublime Spring its title summoning both
season and ce local water sources dowses a devotional path to
high desert headwaters. Cohen sought something different, more
ancient a hearth, a retreat from the noisy and noisome city, yes,
but also a deeper historical understanding of urbanity and
community, landscape and loss. Spring, suffused with mystery and
a keenly evoked sense of place, contains Cohen's most quietly
dazzling, coherent, and self-assured set of songs to date. Having
withdrawn from and returned to the city, she sounds more like
herself than ever before. In the context of the album's bolder
arrangements, her gorgeous, lambent voice and helical fingerstyle
guitar plumb new depths of expressivity, confidence, and wonder.
Inflected with flourishes recalling the '70s orchestrated concept
albums from which it draws influence. Daniel Swire (drums),
Kayla's bandmate in Outfit, and Marc Riordan (piano) of Sun
Araw provided the exquisitely delicate rhythm section; Dave
McPeters once again contributed lightning-field flashes of pedal
steel; and James Elkington arranged the subtly cinematic strings
(played by Jean Cook.) Chris Cohen mixed, imparting some of his
signature classic pop dynamics, which press beyond the sonic
realm of the solitary singer-songwriter. If Open to Chance felt
moonlit, spectral and spooky, Spring sounds positively auroral,
luminous, a brisk early morning walk through lucid daylit dreams,
a series of vivid visions in thrall to the dusty New Mexican
terrain. By opening themselves to multivalent interpretations,
these generous, sun-dappled songs hide nothing. An intentional
narrative of discovery connects the sequence, from the beckoning
highway apparition in Lily, through the immersion in the Blue
Spring dug deep into the recesses of a cliffside cave, to the
resigned farewell of A's Lament (which ends, poignantly, with a
blessing to a departed friend: 'I just want you to be free').
Elsewhere the links to Cohen's research are oblique, more
atmospheric and impressionistic than explicit. Lead single Bess's
Dance provides a metaphorical key to the record's concept, with a
glimpse of the Basketmaker culture's woven artifacts, functional
art objects that so fascinated Cohen that she found herself
dreaming their patterns.